Hyperspectral Classification of Frost Damage Stress in Tomato Plants Based on Few-Shot Learning
Author:
Ruan Shiwei1, Cang Hao1, Chen Huixin2, Yan Tianying3ORCID, Tan Fei1, Zhang Yuan1, Duan Long1, Xing Peng1, Guo Li1, Gao Pan1ORCID, Xu Wei2ORCID
Affiliation:
1. College of Information Science and Technology, Shihezi University, Shihezi 832061, China 2. Key Laboratory of Special Fruits and Vegetables Cultivation Physiology and Germplasm Resources Utilization (Xinjiang Production and Construction Crops), College of Agriculture, Shihezi University, Shihezi 832000, China 3. School of Electronic Information and Electrical Engineering, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, Shanghai 201100, China
Abstract
Early detection and diagnosis of crop anomalies is crucial for enhancing crop yield and quality. Recently, the combination of machine learning and deep learning with hyperspectral images has significantly improved the efficiency of crop detection. However, acquiring a large amount of properly annotated hyperspectral data on stressed crops requires extensive biochemical experiments and specialized knowledge. This limitation poses a challenge to the construction of large-scale datasets for crop stress analysis. Meta-learning is a learning approach that is capable of learning to learn and can achieve high detection accuracy with limited training samples. In this paper, we introduce meta-learning to hyperspectral imaging and crop detection for the first time. In addition, we gathered 88 hyperspectral images of drought-stressed tomato plants and 68 images of freeze-stressed tomato plants. The data related to drought serve as the source domain, while the data related to frost damage serve as the target domain. Due to the difficulty of obtaining target domain data from real-world testing scenarios, only a limited amount of target domain data and source domain data are used for model training. The results indicated that meta-learning, with a minimum of eight target domain samples, achieved a detection accuracy of 69.57%, precision of 59.29%, recall of 66.32% and F1-score of 62.61% for classifying the severity of frost stress, surpassing other methods with a target domain sample size of 20. Moreover, for determining whether the plants were under stress, meta-learning, with a minimum of four target domain samples, achieved a detection accuracy of 89.1%, precision of 89.72%, recall of 93.08% and F1-score of 91.37% outperforming other methods at a target domain sample size of 20. The results show that meta-learning methods require significantly less data across different domains compared to other methods. The performance of meta-learning techniques thoroughly demonstrates the feasibility of rapidly detecting crop stress without the need for collecting a large amount of target stress data. This research alleviates the data annotation pressure for researchers and provides a foundation for detection personnel to anticipate and prevent potential large-scale stress damage to crops.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China International Cooperation Promotion Plan of Shihezi University
Subject
Agronomy and Crop Science
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